People in defensive shooting situations often use a one-handed handgun grip when they should use a two-handed grip. Rob Pincus discusses why shooters tend to default to using one hand and how you can practice with both hands so you don’t make the same mistake. When a person draws a gun in a firefight, the human brain probably doesn’t like stopping the forward motion of the gun into a ready position, so a one-handed grip is quicker. By training to achieve your two handed grip while the gun is moving out towards the target, you’ll increase your chances of using two hands in a defensive situation.

Factors that influence which Kydex outside the waistband holster you prefer include Kydex quality, ride height and cant. Rob Pincus presents another issue that isn’t talked about as much: the percentage of the gun’s profile that is off centerline and being pressed up against the body. When a greater percentage of the gun presses on

Old-school thinking held that if a tourniquet were used on an extremity wound, the injured person would lose that limb. That has been shown to be incorrect, and tourniquets are now in the first-aid kits of medics on battlefields and streets worldwide.